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Brevard County Parenting Plan Attorney

Melbourne Time-Sharing Lawyer Serving Palm Bay, Viera, Rockledge, Cocoa, Cocoa Beach, Titusville, Merritt Island, Cape Canaveral, and all of Brevard County

The Brevard County parenting plan attorney team at Platt, Cole, Russell & Simpson PLLC helps clients navigate child custody, parental responsibility, and time-sharing issues in Melbourne, Palm Bay, Titusville, Cocoa, Rockledge, and surrounding areas. Whether you need to establish, modify, or enforce a custody agreement, having a parenting plan lawyer in Melbourne, FL, can help ensure plans are clear and enforceable.

Brevard County Parenting Plan Attorney

Brevard County Parental Responsibility Agreement Options Under Florida Statute §61.13

Many states, including Florida, have adopted the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA). The Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act is designed to:

  • prevent relocation for child custody advantages,
  • ensure only one state has jurisdiction, and
  • provide a clear process for enforcing administrative orders.

The “home state” is where the child has lived for at least 6 consecutive months before cases are filed (or since birth for infants). Circuit courts can only take temporary emergency jurisdiction if the child is present in the state and there is sufficient evidence to prove child abandonment, abuse, or immediate danger.

Florida law requires parenting plans to address decision-making authority, time-sharing schedules, and each parent’s responsibilities, all based on the best interests of the child’s welfare under Fla. Stat. §61.13.

Shared Parental Responsibility vs Divided and Sole Parental Responsibility

  • Sole parental responsibility: one parent has final say (requires showing detriment to the child’s welfare)
  • Divided parental responsibility: each party has authority over different decision-making categories. These include: education, healthcare, religious upbringing, extracurricular activities, etc.

What’s Required for Parenting Plans in Brevard County

Plans generally need to include parenting responsibilities and authority for decisions

  • How parties will delegate parenting tasks customarily performed
  • Which party decides on behalf of minor children
  • Time-sharing schedule
  • Designation of primary residence
  • Communication methods
  • Process for making changes to the plan

Plans are filed with the Brevard County Clerk of Court at the Moore Justice Center in Viera and must comply with local administrative orders.

Creating a Time-Sharing Schedule in Brevard County, Florida Courts

Florida has moved away from terms like child custody and visitation in Brevard County to time-sharing. While there’s no presumption of equal time-sharing plans, orders generally favor maximizing time spent with both parties.

While overnights do directly affect child support orders, clients should understand there’s a trade-off between creating time-sharing plans that offer more flexibility and plans that address specific needs. In most Florida cases, circuit courts hold that plans should be sufficiently detailed to minimize future disputes.

Holiday Time-Sharing Schedules in Brevard County

Common time-sharing considerations should include:

  • Brevard Public Schools calendars
  • Alternating vs fixed holiday assignments
  • Major holidays: Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve/Day, Easter, July 4th
  • Teacher planning / 3-day weekends
  • Spring break and winter break division
  • Summer vacation time-sharing and notice requirements
  • Birthday, Mother’s and Father’s Day provisions
  • Handling disputes between holidays and regular rotations

Infant Custody Schedule in Brevard County: Time-Sharing for Babies and Toddlers

Toddler-and-infant time-sharing cases require a different approach from standard custody arrangements. Florida courts are informed by and use attachment and bonding research when evaluating which time-sharing arrangement best serves the infant’s or toddler’s interests. So court orders often involve frequent, continuing contact between both parents, recognizing that babies and toddlers depend on secure attachment to their primary caregivers during developmental stages. Additionally, when mothers are breastfeeding, time-sharing arrangements are generally structured around nursing schedules.

School-Age Children Parenting Agreements in Brevard County

The following are generally encouraged to include in time-sharing documents:

  • School district boundaries and enrollment
  • Transportation to and from
  • Homework and academic responsibility
  • Extracurricular activity scheduling and transportation
  • Communication with teachers and access to records

Florida Parenting Plan Template – Common Provisions

Florida Parenting Plan Provisions
01Parental Responsibility and Decision-Making Authority
  • Shared or sole parental responsibility designation
  • Tie-breaker or ultimate deciding authority
  • School selection and educational management
  • Special education and IEP decisions
  • Tutoring and academic support
  • Medical appointments, surgeries, and vaccinations
  • Emergency medical consent authority
  • Mental health and therapy consent
  • Medication management authority
  • Dental and orthodontic healthcare
  • Religious upbringing
  • Extracurricular activity decision authority and cost approval
  • Emergency situations protocol
  • Childcare provider and third-party approval
02Time-Sharing Schedules
  • Regular weekly time-sharing arrangements
  • Overnights
  • Holidays
  • School breaks
  • Summers
  • Birthdays and special occasions
  • Mother's Day and Father's Day
  • Priority order when conflicts occur
  • Make-up time rules and deadlines
  • Minimum time-sharing guarantees
  • Transition cutoffs
03Transportation and Exchanges
  • Exchange locations
  • Responsibility for transportation
  • Transportation cost allocation
  • Late arrival grace periods
  • Missed exchange procedures
  • Third-party pickup authorization
  • Exchange safety requirements
04Communication Provisions
  • Communication frequency, access, and required response times
  • Communication methods: Our Family Wizard, TalkingParents, email, video chat, calls
  • Restrictions on monitoring communications and devices
  • Notice of time-sharing schedule changes
  • Notification requirements for emergencies and medical issues
  • Restrictions on disparaging comments
05Information and Records Access
  • Access to school, medical, mental health, and extracurricular records
  • Notice of educational or medical issues
  • Report card and evaluation sharing
06Childcare and Daily Care
  • Childcare provider selection
  • After-school care arrangements
  • Babysitter approval
  • Right of first refusal terms
  • Backup care procedures
07Travel and Relocation
  • In-state and out-of-state travel notice requirements
  • International travel consent requirements
  • Passport possession and control
  • Travel itinerary disclosure requirements
  • Relocation definition and distance radius
  • Relocation notice procedures
  • Transport to extracurriculars
  • Exchange procedures during travel
08Financial and Expense Allocation
  • Allocation of uninsured medical expenses
  • Allocation of extracurricular costs
  • School-related expense allocation
  • Cost approval thresholds for activities
  • Reimbursement procedures and deadlines
09Conduct, Safety, and Household Standards
  • Supervision standards
  • Discipline and consistency of household rules
  • Substance use and alcohol restrictions
  • Firearms and hazardous item storage requirements
  • Car seat and transportation safety standards
  • Health insurance maintenance obligations
  • Emergency contact information requirements
  • Medical emergency notification requirements
  • Exposure to new romantic partners — introduction, overnight stays, and restrictions
  • Overnight guest restrictions
  • Electronic media, social media, and online posting restrictions
10Dispute Resolution and Enforcement
  • Mediation requirement
  • Parenting coordinator appointment terms
  • Conflict resolution procedures
  • Enforcement remedies
  • Attorney fee and cost shifting
11Modification and Compliance
  • Standards and procedures for modifying agreements
  • Notice requirements for schedule changes
  • Temporary time-sharing adjustment rules
  • Military deployment or extended absence
  • Severability and interpretation clauses

Every family is different. The attorneys at Platt Cole Russell & Simpson PLLC help parents throughout Melbourne, Palm Bay, Titusville, Cocoa, and Brevard County develop parenting plans tailored to their child's specific needs.

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Visitation Rights in Florida

Father’s Visitation Rights

Florida law entitles both mothers and fathers to pursue time-sharing arrangements on equal footing under §61.13. However, unmarried fathers must establish paternity before seeking any court orders or enforcing them. For unmarried fathers, Brevard County paternity representation is an essential first step. Once fathers establish paternity, they can request time-sharing documents and participate in decisions. A visitation attorney in Melbourne, FL, can help determine if there’s been a violation of the father’s rights in Brevard County.

Grandparent Visitation Rights

Under Florida Statute §752.011, grandparents may petition circuit courts for scheduled visitation in narrow circumstances. Judges will consider this when:

  • One or both parents are deceased, missing, or in a persistent vegetative state
  • One parent meets one of those criteria, and the other parent has been convicted of a felony or violent crime

Florida gives significant parental rights to make decisions. This means factors in grandparent petitions for scheduled visitation face a high legal bar. Grandparents with an established history of frequent and continuing contact who believe withheld visitation is affecting the continuity of a fairly consistent routine should contact a Melbourne visitation lawyer to discuss grandparents’ rights in Brevard County.

Melbourne Time-Sharing Lawyer

Long Distance Parenting Plan in Brevard County – When One Parent Moves

When one party wants to relocate, they must establish a long-distance parenting plan. Under Florida Statute §61.13001, they must provide at least 60 days’ written notice before moving over 50 miles from the current residence.

The other party can object. If there’s no time-sharing agreement, circuit courts will decide whether the relocation is in the child’s best interest. If the move is approved, the existing plan must be modified.

Long-distance time-sharing schedules typically provide longer, less frequent visits. Courts may also address travel arrangements, expenses, and communication to maintain relationships. Our Melbourne visitation lawyers provide Brevard County child relocation representation, helping both clients considering moving and those contesting it.

Temporary Relocations for Military Service Members or Work Assignments

Temporary moves are treated differently under Florida Statute §61.13002. Cases involving military contract work and Patrick Space Force divorces are common. When a party is deployed, activated, or temporarily assigned and cannot follow the existing time-sharing schedule, judges can enter a temporary modification if it’s in the child’s best interests.

For other temporary moves, the change may still be approved as long as the move is under 50 miles and lasts less than 60 days.

Additionally, courts may issue temporary relocation orders while final decisions are pending litigation.

Brevard County Visitation Lawyer

Special Circumstances in Brevard County Parenting Agreements

  • Cases involving non-traditional jobs (shift work, healthcare, first responders)
  • Military families and deployment
  • High-conflict, including parallel parenting structures
  • Development of disability, mental, and physical health issues
  • Substance abuse and supervised visitation requirements
  • Mental health considerations and treatment violations
  • Domestic violence

Other major issues can warrant one parent gaining more time or modifying the original order. This generally includes where the moral fitness of a party comes into question, such as when a parent refuses to adhere to plans, knowingly provides false information during ongoing litigation, consistently shows a lack of demonstrated capacity to present a unified front, such as making disparaging comments, not considering the child’s best interests, etc.

When both parents are showing a disregard for minor children, courts will review the home, school, and community records and, in some cases, will delegate parenting tasks customarily performed to a responsible third party.

How Brevard County Judges Evaluate The Child’s Best Interests

Florida sets 20 factors considered when determining what custody arrangement serves a child’s best interest. Key factors include:

  • Each party’s demonstrated capacity to facilitate an ongoing relationship with the other parent
  • Willingness to honor the time-sharing schedule consistently
  • Moral fitness, mental and physical health of each
  • Stability of each home environment
  • Ability to meet the needs throughout the minor children’s developmental stages
  • Ties to the child’s school, daily activities, and community records
  • Any history of domestic violence or substance abuse
  • Child’s preference, if the minor child has sufficient intelligence and maturity to express a reasonable preference
  • Geographic viability of the proposed time-sharing arrangement

Domestic violence is treated as a significant factor in deciding parenting responsibilities and time-sharing arrangements. The same can apply to parenting plans for alcoholic parents or those struggling with drug addiction. A history of domestic violence, abuse of minor children, alcohoism or drug abuse generally results in restricted or supervised visitation.

Parents seeking or responding to Brevard County domestic violence injunctions and child custody should address their potential impact as part of the custody proceeding.

Contested Parenting Plans at Moore Justice Center

When exes can’t agree on plan terms, the case proceeds through Brevard County family law mediation before any contested hearing is scheduled. If mediation fails, the court may appoint a guardian ad litem, order a custody evaluation, or both before setting the matter for litigation. Contested plans are among the most time-consuming and expensive matters.

Creating an agreed-upon time-sharing plan through mediation is almost always in everyone’s best interest. Our parenting plan lawyers in Brevard County have extensive experience facilitating agreements, but are prepared for litigation when circumstances merit.

Parenting Plan Modifications in Brevard County

When both parents agree to modify time-sharing plans and consent to the proposed parenting agreement petitions, judges may approve the updated terms without a hearing. When they don’t, a petition for a contested time-sharing plan is filed. This requires judges to resolve disputes through litigation.

In urgent situations, one parent may also request a temporary emergency modification to protect a minor child from the other parent until a full hearing is held.

To modify time-sharing plans in Brevard County, Florida, courts require a substantial change. Common reasons to hire a custody modification attorney in Melbourne, FL, include changes in a child’s specific needs or relocation. Unless the parents agree, the requesting party is responsible for proving a proper cause of action.

parenting plan melbourne, fl

When the Other Parent Violates Custody Agreement: Brevard County Parenting Plan Enforcement Actions

When the other parent violates a time-sharing arrangement in Brevard County, the proper course of action is to file a motion for civil contempt/enforcement, typically at the Moore Justice Center. The person filing must show a court order exists and the other parent knew about it, had the ability to comply, and didn’t in a manner consistent with Florida Family Law Rule of Procedure 12.615.

Evidence needed can include missed exchanges, texts, emails, witness testimony, or communications from OurFamilyWizard or other similar custody apps. If contempt is proven, judges can order makeup time-sharing, counseling, or other remedies. Additionally, if the court deems it appropriate, it may award reasonable legal fees and associated costs incurred in connection with modification or enforcement actions.

If one parent makes a consistent routine of ignoring time-sharing plans, judges will consider modifying parental responsibility or time-sharing. However, this only applies when it serves the minor child’s best interests.

How Time Sharing Affects Child Support in Florida

Time-sharing plans directly impact child support orders because Florida courts use a formula that accounts for the number of overnight visits each party has.

When one person has at least 20% of overnights (73/year), Florida courts apply a “substantial time-sharing” adjustment. This recalculates child support orders based on both incomes and the division of time sharing.

We provide representation for child support in Brevard County, helping clients incorporate child support orders into legally binding time-sharing plans.

Why Hire a Brevard County Visitation Lawyer

Poorly drafted time-sharing plans create years of conflict and return trips to Florida courts. Our Melbourne family law attorneys know what local judges expect and typically approve. We also have decades of experience working with local mediators and guardian ad litem professionals.

If you need to establish a time-sharing plan, you need a Brevard County time-sharing attorney with a deep understanding of how plans affect child support orders and have the ability to anticipate future family law issues to avoid litigation or having to modify plans in the future.

Drafting a suitable plan the first time is crucial for maintaining consistency when parents separate.

Schedule a Consultation With A Brevard County Parenting Plan Lawyer

If you need help creating, modifying, or enforcing a parenting plan in Brevard County, an experienced lawyer is extremely helpful. We protect minor children’s best interests while working to achieve solutions that support your situation.

For a consultation, call 321-725-3425 or use our online contact form.

 

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